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Our American Stories

The Sleeping Sentinel Who Received the Death Penalty, But Was Saved By President Lincoln

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 19 July 2024

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, The Civil War soldier, William Scott, fell asleep at his post, at the time a transgression punishable by execution. What happened next changed military history.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:14.1

And we continue with our American stories.

0:18.2

Up next, a story from Jonathan White, who's a professor of American Studies at Christopher Newport University and is a Jack Miller Center fellow.

0:28.2

The Jack Miller Center is a nationwide network of scholars and teachers dedicated to educating the next generation about America's founding principles and history.

0:38.2

To learn more, visit jack miller center.org.

0:42.3

Let's take a listen to this story.

0:48.8

Around 2008, I had the idea to write a history of dreams during the Civil War.

0:54.5

I wanted to know what sleep was like for Union and Confederate soldiers

0:58.1

and for the men and women who remained on the home front.

1:01.8

What did nighttime sound like? How dark was it?

1:05.5

What did soldiers use for pillows?

1:08.1

What kept them up at night? And what did they dream about? My book came out in

1:13.3

2017 with the University of North Carolina Press. It's called Midnight in America, Darkness,

1:19.8

Sleep, and Dreams during the Civil War. When I was researching Midnight in America,

1:27.0

I kept coming across the story of a young soldier from Vermont named William Scott.

1:33.4

William Scott was 22 years old when he mustered into the third Vermont infantry in July 1861.

1:40.4

He was a big, awkward country boy with a big heart.

1:44.8

Within a few weeks of enlisting, Private Scott found himself encamped near Washington, D.C.

1:50.7

On August 29th, he volunteered to take Pickett duty for his sick friend.

1:55.2

The next night, he had to serve on Pickett again.

1:58.3

He was very tired now, not having really slept for two days. He just couldn't

2:05.0

keep his eyes from drooping shut. And sometime between three and four in the morning on August

...

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